GeoGuess is a popular, completely free alternative that uses Google Street View API or Mapillary. It features various multiplayer modes, custom maps, and does not require a paid subscription to play multiple rounds. Hide & Seek World

We have provided the "how," but we must address the "should."

Choose a different language for the input, and select English for the output.

What is on the network? (Blocked URL, blocked extensions, or restricted downloads?) Share public link

GeoGuessr and its clones rely on . Schools often block the specific Google domains that serve the images ( khms.googleapis.com or streetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com ).

: A common unblocked mirror that replicates the core gameplay using open Street View data.

Using your cellular data (4G/5G) to create a mobile hotspot is technically not "unblocking" the game—it’s avoiding the network entirely. Since the traffic comes from your carrier, not the school’s IP address, the school’s firewall cannot touch it.

If the aggregators are blocked, you can try to cloak your traffic.

Maya grinned. “I pre-cached the whole world. All 50 gigabytes of street-level imagery from the past five years. We don’t need the internet at all anymore. We are the internet.”

: Turn off 3D features if the map loading animation stutters.

: A popular free clone that offers the classic "guess where you are" gameplay without a subscription.

Geoguessr is a popular online game that drops players into random street-view images and asks them to guess the location on a world map. “Unblocked” variations or access methods make the game playable even when the primary site is restricted. These alternatives raise questions about access, learning opportunities, and appropriate use.

: A multiplayer twist on the geography guessing genre that often slips past standard web filters. 3. Use a Web Proxy

Sometimes, the official site is blocked, but mirror sites or alternative mapping tools are not. offers a great selection of free geography challenges that often bypass school firewalls. 2. Using a VPN

Leo didn’t blink. “The road had a specific type of sheep grate. The Icelandic ones have vertical bars, Faroese have horizontal.”

Technically, yes. If the school has a published "Acceptable Use Policy" (AUP) that prohibits bypassing security software, using a proxy or VPN violates that rule.